Published on : 12 Jun 2026
Breaking: Ben Gurion International Airport (TLV) β Israel’s primary international gateway near Tel Aviv, handling more than 19 million passengers annually and the sole commercial entry point for international visitors to Israel, Jerusalem, and the broader Holy Land β records 127 delays and 5 cancellations (132 total disruptions) Friday, June 12, as El Al Israel Airlines leads all carriers in disruption count, United Airlines, Lufthansa, and Air France all post significant delays on their New York, Frankfurt, and Paris services, and the airport continues to operate under the structural constraints of safe air corridor protocols first established after US strikes on Iran triggered a complete Israeli airspace closure on February 28, 2026. Today is Day 64 since Ben Gurion fully reopened to international traffic on April 9, 2026 β and today’s 132 total disruptions represent the continuation of a pattern that has produced major disruption events on May 28 (59 delays), June 4 (127 delays + 5 cancellations), June 8 (156 delays + 15 cancellations), and June 10 (122 delays + 15 cancellations) β an airport operating at elevated disruption rates every single week since its post-war reopening, with no airline able to claim a normal operating day at Ben Gurion in the entire post-ceasefire period. For UK, Australian, Canadian, and US passengers booked on Israel routes β whether for tourism to Jerusalem and the Dead Sea, pilgrimage travel, business, or visiting family β today’s disruptions are not a surprise. They are the new operating reality at one of the world’s most geopolitically complex aviation hubs. Here is everything every passenger needs to know.
Published: June 12, 2026 (Friday) Ben Gurion total disruptions: 132 (127 delays + 5 cancellations!) El Al: Leads all carriers β approx. 44+ delays (historically 30β35% of all TLV disruptions!) United Airlines: Delays on New York Newark (EWR) β Tel Aviv route! Lufthansa: Delays on Frankfurt (FRA) β Tel Aviv route! Air France: Delays on Paris CDG β Tel Aviv route! Also affected: Arkia Β· Israir Β· Wizz Air Β· FlyDubai Β· Aegean Airlines! Routes broken: New York Β· London Β· Paris Β· Frankfurt Β· Dubai Β· Athens Β· Rome! Airspace status: Safe corridor protocols ACTIVE β all international flights operating via approved routes! Airport reopening: Day 64 since April 9, 2026 full reopening! Passengers affected: Est. 19,800+ (132 Γ 150 average!) Ben Gurion June pattern: 59 disruptions (May 28) β 127+5 (Jun 4) β 156+15 (Jun 8) β 122+15 (Jun 10) β 127+5 (Jun 12, TODAY)! Rights framework: Israeli Aviation Law + Airline-specific policies (EU261 for EU-carrier EU-departing legs only!)
Before the disruption numbers make sense, every passenger needs to understand the extraordinary context in which Ben Gurion is currently operating β because this is not a story about bad weather or crew shortages. It is a story about an airport rebuilding from war.
The Timeline: From Closure to Today
βοΈ February 28, 2026: US military strikes on Iran β Israeli airspace immediately closes to foreign airlines. Ben Gurion goes from 500+ daily international movements to near-zero for foreign carriers overnight. El Al, Arkia, and Israir continue limited operations under emergency military protocols. Every other airline β British Airways, Lufthansa, United, Air France, Emirates β suspends Israeli services immediately.
βοΈ February 28 β April 8, 2026 (39 days): Ben Gurion operates as a ghost airport for foreign carriers. Some foreign governments charter repatriation flights. El Al operates under military airspace coordination. Passengers booked on international carriers receive cancellations with no firm rebooking timeline.
βοΈ April 8β9, 2026: USβIran ceasefire agreement reached. Israel’s Transportation Ministry announces full airspace reopening effective midnight April 9. Foreign carriers given 24β48 hours notice to resume services.
βοΈ April 9, 2026 β Reopening Day: Ben Gurion resumes international operations. All terminal services reactivated. Foreign carriers begin returning β but not all immediately, and not at full pre-war frequencies.
βοΈ April 9 β June 12, 2026 (Day 64 TODAY): Ben Gurion operating under safe corridor protocols β international flights must use specifically approved routing corridors that avoid Iranian and certain other regional airspace. This adds flight time, fuel burn, and operational complexity to every route. Airlines are operating reduced schedules with minimum spare capacity β every disruption cascades because there is no buffer.
Why “Safe Corridor” Operations Cause Structural Disruption:
Although flights restarted across the region after a ceasefire, airlines are operating only through carefully approved safe corridors, meaning that even routine operations at Ben Gurion carry a degree of complexity that does not apply at most European or North American airports.
In practice, safe corridor operations mean: βοΈ Longer flight times: Routes that previously flew over Iranian airspace now route around it β adding 45β90 minutes to flights between Israel and Southeast Asia, India, and parts of the Gulf! βοΈ Increased fuel costs: Longer routes = more fuel = higher operating costs = airlines operating fewer spare aircraft at TLV! βοΈ ATC coordination complexity: Each flight requires pre-approval from multiple airspace authorities β Israel, Jordan, Cyprus, and others β adding procedural time to every departure! βοΈ Minimum schedule margins: Airlines rebuilt Tel Aviv schedules with tight turnaround times β any inbound aircraft that arrives 20 minutes late triggers a cascade for the outbound departure! βοΈ No weather buffer: Pre-war, airlines kept 1β2 spare aircraft at TLV for disruption recovery. Post-reopening, none do β every spare aircraft is deployed to rebuild frequency on other recovering routes!
El Al β Israel’s national carrier and by far the largest operator at Ben Gurion, running approximately 30β35% of all TLV daily operations β leads all carriers in today’s disruption count with an estimated 44+ delays:
El Al June 12 Performance:
βοΈ Estimated delays: 44+ β consistent with El Al’s 33% delay rate recorded in recent weeks! βοΈ Routes affected: Tel Aviv β New York JFK/Newark (EWR) Β· Tel Aviv β London Heathrow (LHR) Β· Tel Aviv β Paris CDG Β· Tel Aviv β Frankfurt Β· Tel Aviv β Amsterdam Β· Tel Aviv β Rome Β· Tel Aviv β Athens! βοΈ Domestic routes: Tel Aviv β Eilat (VDA) Β· Tel Aviv β Haifa β domestic Israeli routes also disrupted!
El Al’s Structural Problem:
El Al entered the post-war period with its own significant operational challenges on top of the industry-wide safe corridor constraints:
El Al’s New York Routes β Most Critical for UK/US/Australian Passengers:
βοΈ TLV β New York JFK/EWR: El Al’s flagship transatlantic service β 11-hour direct flight β delays today affect passengers connecting from London, Dublin, and UK regional airports who joined the flight at TLV after overnight arrival from UK! βοΈ Frequency: El Al operates 2β3 daily TLV β New York services β delays cascade between morning and evening banks!
El Al Passenger Rights:
El Al operates under Israeli Aviation Law β not EU261 or UK261 (Israel is not an EU or UK member): βοΈ Israeli Aviation Services Law (2012): El Al must provide compensation for controllable delays and cancellations β amounts vary but framework exists! βοΈ EU261 for El Al passengers: If your El Al flight departs FROM an EU airport (e.g., Tel Aviv β Frankfurt β your home in Germany) β wait: El Al departs FROM Israel (non-EU) β EU261 does NOT apply on the TLV-originating leg. BUT if El Al operates a flight FROM Frankfurt TO Tel Aviv on a return journey β EU261 DOES apply on the FRA-departing segment! βοΈ UK261: Same logic β UK261 applies to El Al flights departing FROM UK airports (LHR β TLV return leg) but NOT to TLV-originating outbound flights! βοΈ El Al’s own compensation policy: More generous than Israeli minimum requirements β check elaluk.com (UK) / el-al.com/en-us (US) for specific delay/cancellation compensation claims! βοΈ Travel insurance: Your primary protection for Israeli travel β especially given the ongoing elevated disruption pattern and residual regional uncertainty!
United Airlines β operating Tel Aviv as part of its Middle East network with Newark (EWR) β Tel Aviv service β records significant delays Friday:
United Airlines June 12 TLV Performance:
βοΈ Route: Newark (EWR) β Tel Aviv Ben Gurion (TLV) and return! βοΈ Aircraft: Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner (typical TLV deployment)! βοΈ Frequency: United operates daily EWRβTLV service β delay = cascading effect on tomorrow’s Tel Aviv-originating departure! βοΈ Passenger profile: US tourists visiting Israel Β· Jewish-American community travel Β· Business travellers Β· Holy Land pilgrimages!
Why United’s TLV Delays Hit US Passengers Hard:
United’s Newark β Tel Aviv is the primary direct USβIsrael route for East Coast passengers. With delays today:
DOT Rights for United TLV Passengers:
United flights departing FROM Newark (US airport) β DOT rights apply on the outbound leg: βοΈ Controllable cancellation: Full cash refund OR free rebooking! βοΈ Controllable 3+ hour delay: Meals required! βοΈ Overnight controllable: Hotel + ground transport required! βοΈ Contact United: 1-800-864-8331 / united.com!
For TLV β EWR return leg departing Israel β Israeli aviation law applies (not DOT). United’s own customer commitment may exceed Israeli minimums β check united.com/traveloptions.
Lufthansa β operating Frankfurt (FRA) β Tel Aviv as one of its key Middle East hub routes β records significant delays Friday:
Lufthansa June 12 TLV Performance:
βοΈ Route: Frankfurt (FRA) β Tel Aviv Ben Gurion (TLV)! βοΈ Frequency: Multiple daily FRAβTLV services! βοΈ Cascade: Delayed TLV arrival β delayed FRA departure β Lufthansa’s Frankfurt hub absorbs a mispositioned widebody! βοΈ Star Alliance partners affected: United, Swiss, Austrian, Singapore Airlines codeshares on FRAβTLV all feel the delay!
EU261 Rights for Lufthansa TLV Passengers:
βοΈ FRA β TLV (departing Germany = EU airport): EU261 FULLY APPLIES! βοΈ Delay 3+ hours (controllable): β¬600 per person (FRAβTLV = over 3,500km!) βοΈ TLV β FRA (departing Israel): EU261 does NOT apply (non-EU departure!) β BUT Lufthansa’s own compensation policy may still apply! βοΈ File claim: lufthansa.com β Compensation Claim! βοΈ Escalate: Luftfahrt-Bundesamt (LBA) β lba.de β Germany’s National Enforcement Body!
The Critical EU261 Question for TLV Disruptions:
Safe corridor operations add flight time β but is this extraordinary circumstances?
βοΈ Corridor routing = ATC restriction β EU courts have generally treated government-imposed airspace restrictions as extraordinary circumstances! βοΈ BUT: After 64 days, airlines have had ample time to adapt scheduling. Courts may find that Day 64 corridor-related delays are now foreseeable and should have been accommodated in scheduling β making them NOT extraordinary! βοΈ Practical advice: File EU261 regardless β let Lufthansa prove extraordinary circumstances. The 64-day foreseeable pattern weakens their extraordinary circumstances defence!
Air France β operating Paris Charles de Gaulle (CDG) β Tel Aviv as its primary Israel service β records significant delays Friday:
Air France June 12 TLV Performance:
βοΈ Route: Paris CDG β Tel Aviv TLV! βοΈ Cascade: CDG already recorded 289 delays + 21 cancellations on June 4 β Air France’s Paris hub is simultaneously strained AND its Tel Aviv route is under safe corridor pressure! βοΈ Double strain: Air France is managing both Parisian hub overcrowding and Israeli route corridor complexity simultaneously!
EU261 Rights for Air France TLV Passengers:
βοΈ CDG β TLV (departing France = EU airport): EU261 FULLY APPLIES! βοΈ 3+ hour delay (controllable): β¬600 (CDGβTLV = over 3,500km!) βοΈ File: airfrance.com β Customer Service β Claims! βοΈ Escalate: DGAC (France) β ecologie.gouv.fr!
Despite Ben Gurion’s April 9 reopening, a significant number of carriers that suspended Israeli services during the Iran conflict have not yet returned β reducing the total seats available to Ben Gurion and limiting rebooking options for disrupted passengers:
Still Suspended as of June 12, 2026:
βοΈ British Airways: Suspended indefinitely β no confirmed return date as of June 12! βοΈ Ryanair: Suspended β no confirmed return to Israel! βοΈ easyJet: Suspended β no Israeli services operating! βοΈ TUI Airways: Suspended β UK charter flights to Israel not operating! βοΈ Wizz Air (selective): Some routes resumed, some still suspended β check wizzair.com! βοΈ Emirates: Partial service resumed via modified routing β check emirates.com! βοΈ Several Asian carriers: Routes not yet restored β limited AsiaβIsrael connectivity!
What This Means for Rebooking:
When today’s El Al, United, Lufthansa, or Air France delay at TLV requires rebooking, the pool of alternative flights is dramatically smaller than pre-war:
UK and Australian passengers flying to Israel face a two-stage disruption risk today β at their departure airports AND at Ben Gurion:
Currently operating UKβIsrael services: βοΈ El Al LHR β TLV: El Al continues London Heathrow service β but delayed today as part of El Al’s 44+ TLV disruptions! βοΈ Wizz Air LTN β TLV: Selective routes β check wizzair.com for current schedule! βοΈ No British Airways TLV service: BA suspended β no alternative!
UK routing reality:
UK261 rights: βοΈ El Al LHR β TLV: UK261 applies (departing UK airport!) β Β£520 if delayed 3+ hours controllable! βοΈ Lufthansa LHR β FRA β TLV: UK261 on LHRβFRA leg + EU261 on FRAβTLV leg = double protection!
Australian passengers typically route to Israel via: βοΈ Sydney/Melbourne β Dubai β Tel Aviv (Emirates): Emirates partially resumed β check before booking! βοΈ Sydney/Melbourne β Doha β Tel Aviv (Qatar Airways): Qatar Airways operating TLV β delays possible! βοΈ Sydney/Melbourne β Singapore β Frankfurt β Tel Aviv: Longest but currently most stable routing!
Australian Consumer Law note: For Australian-ticketed itineraries, the entire journey is subject to Australian Consumer Law obligations β even if disruption occurs in Israel!
Today’s 132 disruptions fit a clear pattern that has repeated every week since Ben Gurion reopened:
| Date | Delays | Cancellations | Total | Primary Cause |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 28 | 57 | 2 | 59 | El Al + Aegean scheduling strain |
| June 4 | 127 | 5 | 132 | Multi-carrier operational breakdown |
| June 8 | 156 | 15 | 171 | Largest post-reopening event |
| June 10 | 122 | 15 | 137 | El Al + United + Lufthansa |
| June 12 (TODAY) | 127 | 5 | 132 | El Al + United + Lufthansa + Air France |
The pattern is clear: Ben Gurion is producing a major disruption event (100+ disruptions) approximately every 2β4 days since reopening. This is not random. It is the structural consequence of:
When Will This Normalise?
The honest answer: Ben Gurion will not return to pre-war operational normalcy until: βοΈ All major suspended carriers return (BA, Ryanair, easyJet β no confirmed dates)! βοΈ Safe corridor protocols ease or become fully routinised (requires regional stability β no timeline)! βοΈ Airlines rebuild TLV spare capacity (6β12 months of stable operations needed)! βοΈ El Al fleet utilisation normalises (maintenance backlog from emergency-protocol period clears)!
Realistic timeline: Q4 2026 at earliest for meaningful improvement. Pre-war disruption levels (50β80 disruptions/day): 2027 at earliest.
If Your TLV Flight Is Delayed Today:
If Your TLV Flight Is Cancelled Today:
Emergency Contacts:
βοΈ El Al (UK): +44 20 7529 8041 / elaluk.com βοΈ El Al (US): 1-800-223-6700 / el-al.com βοΈ El Al (Australia): +61 2 9244 2300 βοΈ United Airlines: 1-800-864-8331 / united.com βοΈ Lufthansa: +44 371 945 9747 (UK) / lufthansa.com βοΈ Air France: +44 207 660 0337 (UK) / airfrance.com βοΈ Ben Gurion Airport Operations: +972 3 972 3333 / iaa.gov.il βοΈ Israel Airports Authority (flight status): iaa.gov.il/en/airports/ben-gurion
Given Ben Gurion’s consistent elevated disruption pattern, travel insurance is not optional for Israel travel in 2026 β it is the single most important pre-travel purchase:
What travel insurance covers that airlines don’t:
βοΈ Consequential losses: Pre-paid Jerusalem hotels, Dead Sea resort bookings, guided tour deposits β none of these are covered by airline compensation or EU261/UK261, but all are recoverable under trip cancellation insurance! βοΈ Medical evacuation: Given the residual regional uncertainty, medical evacuation cover is specifically important for Israel travel in 2026! βοΈ Travel disruption: Extended hotel stays in Tel Aviv due to airline delays β insurance covers this when airline won’t! βοΈ FCDO/State Dept advisory coverage: Check that your policy covers travel to countries with active government advisories β some policies exclude these!
FCDO Travel Advice (UK): As of June 12, 2026, the UK FCDO advises against all travel to certain areas of Israel. Check gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/israel before departure β your insurance policy may be invalidated in FCDO-advised areas!
US State Department: Check travel.state.gov/israel for current travel advisory level before booking!
Ben Gurion International Airport records 127 delays and 5 cancellations Friday, June 12 β 132 total disruptions β on Day 64 since the airport fully reopened following six weeks of closure during which US strikes on Iran triggered a complete Israeli airspace shutdown. El Al leads all carriers with an estimated 44+ delays across its New York, London, Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, and domestic Israeli network. United Airlines, Lufthansa, and Air France all post significant delays on their transatlantic and European services, while safe corridor operations continue to add complexity, flight time, and operational rigidity to every aircraft movement at Ben Gurion.
Today’s numbers are neither a surprise nor an anomaly. They are the fifth major disruption event in 15 days at Ben Gurion β a pattern of 59 disruptions on May 28, 132 on June 4, 171 on June 8, 137 on June 10, and 132 today β exposing an airport that reopened too quickly for the infrastructure to fully absorb, with airlines rebuilding schedules on minimum margins, no spare aircraft at Tel Aviv, safe corridor routing adding 45β90 minutes to regional flights, and a roster of suspended carriers (British Airways, Ryanair, easyJet, TUI) that has dramatically reduced total seat capacity and rebooking alternatives for disrupted passengers.
The rights picture at Ben Gurion is more complex than any European airport: EU261 and UK261 apply only on EU and UK airport-departing legs β meaning your FRA β TLV Lufthansa flight gives you EU261 rights at Frankfurt, but your TLV β FRA return does not (Israeli law applies instead). This asymmetry catches passengers off guard. For every Ben Gurion itinerary in 2026: travel insurance is the primary protection β covering consequential losses, pre-paid tours, Jerusalem hotels, and medical coverage in a region where FCDO and State Dept advisories remain active.
For Ben Gurion passengers today: check iaa.gov.il for live flight status! Know your rights by departure airport β EU261 on EU-originating legs, UK261 on UK-originating legs, DOT on US-originating legs, Israeli law on TLV-originating legs! File EU261 claims at Lufthansa and Air France regardless β Day 64 of corridor operations weakens extraordinary circumstances defence! No British Airways alternative β plan routing via Lufthansa/KLM/Air France! Travel insurance is non-negotiable β file immediately for pre-paid Israel losses! Check FCDO/State Dept advisories before departure β insurance validity may depend on advisory status!
Day 64 since reopening. 127 delays. 5 cancellations. El Al strained. United delayed. Lufthansa disrupted. Air France hit. No BA. No Ryanair. No easyJet. Safe corridors active. Ben Gurion’s post-war normalisation has not arrived.
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